Standards Don’t Teach. .
. Teachers Do! How to Improve Classroom
Success
Dear
Colleagues,
It’s easy to get personally overwhelmed in
today’s day and age. We are bombarded by
the 24/7 news cycle, constant e-mails, social media, and a world (for good and
for bad) that is literally “at our finger tips”- - or, at least, our “mouse
clicks.”
The same is true in our professional lives. Relative to school improvement and maximizing
student learning, new national (or international) reports are published daily,
new experts seem to emerge weekly, and new approaches are marketed constantly.
And then, there are the “mixed messages”- -
especially from the U.S. Department of Education and many state departments of
education. These messages come in the
form of guidance instructions, white papers, websites and webinars, state-wide
professional development programs (paid by the taxpayers), and even targeted grant
proposal requests.
While our state and federal leaders say,
“This is voluntary”. . . they typically communicate, “We know better than you”.
. . and they often mean, “You would be well-advised to do this.”
I have seen this recently- - and for too
long a period of time- - as it relates to the “options” for school improvement,
PBIS (Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports), identifying and treating
dyslexia and learning disabilities, and RtI and multi-tiered services.
The result, for many harried and overwhelmed
educators, is to just assume that the “experts” sending us e-mails or in our
state capitols have field-tested and validated their approaches. However, even when their approaches don’t make
sense, many educators often accept them anyways, because they either want to be
“in compliance,” or they don’t have time to research and vet the alternatives.
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Staying Grounded
Educators need expertise that provides
specific “evidence-based blueprints” (or road maps) that guide effective
teaching, steer differentiated classroom instruction, and address students who
are not learning, mastering, or applying the information that is being presented. These blueprints must flex with different
student and staff conditions, while maintaining the integrity needed to
accomplish functional and real student outcomes.
And just like the blueprint to a house that
provides exact dimensions, plumbing and wiring locations, and decorative
details. . . the blueprint for an effective school and classroom needs to look at
the intersection of curricular factors, teacher-instructional factors,
and student factors.
And why?
Because teachers and administrators are dealing with real students, real
situations, real resources (of the lack thereof), and colleagues who are doing
the best that they can with the information and skills that they possess.
While I constantly “live” this reality in
the schools I work with across the county, it was even more evident than usual
during the past two weeks as I traveled from Michigan to New Jersey to Kentucky
to Ohio.
For example, in one school, I found myself
restraining a third grader who decided to turn over every desk in the in-school
suspension room, and begin to use pencils as darts.
In another day treatment school, I watched
as the local police handcuffed and arrested an adolescent boy and girl who had
brought a box cutter and a butter knife to school in what staff thought was the
beginning of a gang-related act of violence.
And in a third school, I had to argue with a
new and inexperienced vice principal who did not have the knowledge and skills
to recognize the limitations of the state’s PBIS training that she had just
attended. At the same time, her building
principal (with whom I have worked for over a decade) knew that the evidence-based
approaches we have collaboratively implemented in her school do work- - it
is just that her staff stopped doing the work.
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Another National Survey on Literacy
Standards: Classroom
Implications ?
Last week (October 13th), the
National Center for Literacy Education (NCLE) released a report, Building
Literacy Capacity: The Conditions for
Effective Standards Implementation.
This report summarized a May, 2015 on-line survey of over 1,400
building-level educators who disproportionately (50% of them) taught at the
high school level.
Critically, the survey was sent only to
building-level educators in public pre-kindergarten through Grade 12 schools in
states that had recently adopted or revised their literacy standards (that
is, a limited, pre-targeted sample).
While educators with different school roles (principals, librarians,
instructional coaches) were originally surveyed, this Report analyzed and focused
only on the “findings specific to classroom teachers.”
Significantly, the Report’s author noted
that those responding to the survey represented a “sample of convenience.” It was also noted that, given the disproportionate
number of high school respondents, “sample weighting procedures were used to
increase the relative weight of responses from elementary teachers in all
summary statistics.” All of the data
were reported in percentages with no grade-level differentiation.
[CLICK HERE for Report]
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While I am not criticizing the motivation
behind this Report, it is concerning that:
* The
survey questions seem to be tailored to the mission, focus, and “theory of
action” of this organization (which consists of stakeholders that include over
10 national education associations).
Thus, the results appeared to be biased toward supporting most facets of
the organization’s model of literacy learning.
* As noted above, there were a number of
methodological weaknesses in the study which likely impact the validity and
generalizability of the results. As an
Editorial Board member and reviewer (over the years) for half a dozen refereed
professional journals, I have my doubts that this study would have been
published in any of them.
* Regardless, the Report was unveiled
through a national Press Release, a social media deluge, and coverage in a
prominent Education Week Teacher blog.
The media coverage emphasized only the summary and primary outcomes of
the study. It was left to the individual
professional to read the Summary of Findings document where the methodological
limitations and statistical transformations noted above were discussed.
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Once again, my point is that this
study represents many studies that, over the years, have been commissioned
or sponsored by different governmental agencies, national associations,
coalitions, foundations, university institutes, and others - - and have been
released into our media-saturated professional worlds.
Ultimately, it is our obligation as
responsible consumers to decide when (a) the “research” questions are
self-selected to produce self-fulfilling results; (b) methodological and other
weaknesses are present and de-emphasized; and (c) a study’s conclusions support
an educational or political agenda favored by the sponsoring group.
All of this puts the “burden of proof” on
the individual to determine the quality, importance, and generalizability of
any study and its outcomes. And yet,
there just isn’t enough time. Given the
speed and demands of our professional lives (see the Introduction above), we
sometimes accept the results of studies that confirm our beliefs, rather than
analyze them in an objective and discerning way.
And, sometimes, this is exactly what some
sponsoring groups depend on.
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Getting Back to the Classroom
All of the critique aside, the NCLE Report’s
conclusions were anchored by the group’s “Theory of Action,” and organized in
five blueprint areas: Assessment,
Instruction, Leadership, Professional Learning, and Curriculum.
While all of these areas potentially impact
classroom instruction, the Report’s findings and recommendations discussed the
kind of global, school-level, top-down strategies that sound great, but are
open to interpretation and misinterpretation.
For example, the Report’s Press Release
discussed the characteristics below as part of the “emerging” standards-based
literacy instruction blueprint:
* Assessment
needs to be used to provide feedback on the learning process.
* Instruction
needs to be aligned with standards.
* Leadership
needs to provide clear direction accompanied by teacher ownership.
* Professional
Learning should be an investment where time is available for teacher
collaboration.
* Schools
need to provide the time and support that allows teachers to review, adapt, and
even create their own curricular materials to reflect instructional standards.
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While this is all well and good, for our “how-many-e-mails-did-you-get-today”
educators, we have got to target their classrooms, instruction, and students.
That is, if we truly want to improve student
learning, we need to stop inundating and overwhelming educators with top-down
generalizations, and give them clear and explicit guidance that focuses on the
Instructional Environment.
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The Instructional Environment involves
the integration of curricular, teacher-instructional, and student
characteristics and factors.
Expanding briefly:
* The Curricular Characteristics and Factors . . . involve the
different academic curricula taught in a classroom, as well as their connection
to state standards and benchmarks, and district scope and sequence objectives
(i.e., “What needs to be learned?”).
Among the questions that teachers need answered in this area are the
following:
- Does my curriculum specify the particular objectives that the student is expected to master for each instructional unit?
- Does my curriculum specify the particular skills that the student must possess as a prerequisite to meeting the instructional objectives for each unit?
- Does my curriculum task analyze specific skills, when appropriate, such that sequential and mastery-oriented learning results for all students?
- Does my curriculum provide a range of levels to accommodate the different cognitive and language levels that might exist within an integrated classroom?
- Does my curriculum introduce new skills such that students have a high probability of success and provide sufficient positive practice opportunities for students to attain mastery?
- Does my curriculum have built-in opportunities for students to transfer new training to other academic situations, applications, and contexts?
- Does my curriculum have horizontal skill books and other materials available for students who need extra instruction and/or practice to attain mastery?
- Does my curriculum follow research-based methods of instruction relative to student mastery and other relevant outcomes?
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* The Teacher-Instructional Characteristics and Factors . . .
involve the teachers who are teaching specific academic curricula, and how they
organize and execute their classroom instruction (i.e., “Are appropriate
instructional and management strategies being used?”).
Among the questions that teachers need answered in this area are the
following:
- Does my instructional environment support the learning/educational process?
- Am I being effective with all students?
- Can I adapt or modify the curriculum such that there is an appropriate student-curriculum match?
- Is my instruction programmed for student success?
- When students are not responding to effective, differentiated instruction, is there a problem-solving process available to determine the root cause of the problem, and can the assessment results be linked directly to intervention?
- When academic modifications, accommodations, or interventions are needed, do I have the knowledge, skill, confidence, objectivity, and/or interactional skills to maximize success?
- When academic modifications, accommodations, or interventions are needed, are there appropriate resources, support materials, and staff available to me to maximize success?
- When academic modifications, accommodations, or interventions are needed, are the recommended interventions acceptable, socially valid, and able to be implemented effectively and realistically?
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* The Student Characteristics and Factors . . . look especially
at whether students are engaged in learning; are responding to effective instruction
and sound curricula; and are motivated and able to learn, master, and apply
academic material (i.e., “Is each student capable, prepared, motivated, and
able to learn, and are they learning?”).
Among the questions that teachers need answered in this area are the
following:
- Do all of my students have the prerequisite skills for the required/desired academic tasks?
- Do all of my students have the self-competency, cognitive/metacognitive, motivational, social/interactive, executive, and other supportive skills or strategies needed to for successful academic engagement and execution?
- Do all of my students have and/or use the appropriate learning styles and approaches needed to successfully complete all academic tasks?
- Are all of my students motivated to learn, dedicated to independent learning, and able to work individually, in small group settings, and in whole-group instruction?
- Are all of my students able to evaluate their own academic performance, or respond to formative and summative feedback that reflects on their progress, accomplishments, and goals?
These are the
questions that teachers and administrators need answered when we approach them
with new studies or national reports that describe (sometimes) new strategies,
programs, or initiatives.
As working
practitioners dealing with real students in real classrooms, these educators
need fewer global, school-level, top-down strategies, and more direct,
practical, step-by-step, field-tested, and student/staff friendly strategies
and interventions. . . especially when they have academically struggling or
behaviorally challenging students.
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Summary
If
we are really committed to better, high, and achievable outcomes for all
students, we need to focus more on characteristics and factors that
are directly related to our classrooms- - our Instructional Environments.
This
is what our research tells us, and this is what our educators- - especially our
teachers- - want and need.
National surveys and reports are important. But they sometimes get more media attention
than they should. . . and sometimes, this attention persuades district and
school administrators to begin professional development initiatives that are
misapplied, misguided, and doomed for failure.
This is especially problematic when the
studies and reports are flawed, when they are published anyways, and when their
flaws are not transparently acknowledged.
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I
hope that you will reflect on this message’s information and thoughts. Know that I
appreciate everything that you do as educational leaders in our country. I look forward to YOUR thoughts and comments. Let me know how I can help your state,
regional cooperative, district, or school to move to the next level of
excellence.
Best,
Howie